Photo from the Seaman Fire on Thursday. (U.S. Forest Service)Crews have completely contained the Seaman Fire, officials said Friday night.The fire had hardly changed since Thursday, and Greeley firefighters assigned to the blaze returned home.Greeley fire Lt. Greg Cobb said the five-person wildland crew returned to the city Thursday afternoon after being dispatched to Greeley’s Milton Seaman Reservoir, about 35 miles northwest of Greeley, Wednesday morning. The firefighters had been dispatched to help protect the city’s reservoir.The U.S. Forest Service reported Friday the fire was relatively inactive overnight, remaining at 231 acres in size and once they contained the blaze, fire crews were able to shift their focus to mop-up operations and monitoring.[swift-infobox title=”For more”]For more information on the blaze, go to inciweb.nwcg.gov/incident/6201/ or call the Arapaho and Roosevelt National Forest Incident Information line at (970) 498-1030.[/swift-infobox]Low humidity and warm temperatures are expected to continue in the lower Poudre Canyon, and firefighters are prepared to adjust tactics as conditions might change, the service reported.No roads are closed, but Greyrock Trail, Hewlett Gulch Trail and Fort Collins’ Gateway Park Natural Area are closed to the public until further notice. Light smoke might be visible from Fort Collins as the fire continues to burn within the 2012 Hewlett Fire burn scar.A map of the Seaman Fire’s perimeter on Friday. (InciWeb/U.S. Forest Service)